Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Verge readers can get an exclusive discount on the Boox Palma 2

    August 14, 2025

    GPT-5 Doesn’t Dislike You—It Might Just Need a Benchmark for Emotional Intelligence

    August 14, 2025

    I Replaced My Mac With an iPad for an Entire Week. It Went as Well as You’d Expect

    August 14, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » So You Can 3D Print a Steak Now—but Why on Earth Would You?
    Science

    So You Can 3D Print a Steak Now—but Why on Earth Would You?

    News RoomBy News RoomOctober 5, 20243 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    Most of us don’t know how our food is made. We don’t know much about what our burger ate when it was part of a cow, where that cow lived, or how it died. Ditto for the wheat in our bread, or the leaves in our salad. The food system is mostly a black box to us.

    This disconnection is why farm-to-table has been so successful—it seeks to reacquaint us with our food, and to consider the water, emissions, labor, and care that go into our meals.

    Now, I’m all in favor of this, but there is one area where I wouldn’t mind hearing less about how our food is made: plant-based meats. I’m convinced we need plant-based alternatives to animal products, but I suspect alt-protein companies sometimes get a little too caught up in how these meats are made—Fiber-spinning! Air fermentation! Weird forms of extrusion!—and forget about the taste.

    I get the focus on food nerdery. I am a WIRED journalist, after all. But when I hear the buzz of tech frenzy at food conferences I have just one question: Is it delicious?

    This is why I was pretty nonplussed when someone offered to send me a bunch of 3D-printed meat from a company in Israel. Then again, I thought, plant-based meat has been in the doldrums recently. Maybe it did need a technological breakthrough to take it to the next level. Plus, 3D-printing a steak is kinda cool, and these testing kits were apparently “quite costly” and not available to the public yet. I asked the PR to send them over.

    Plant-based meats need to be more than just buzz, says Arik Kaufman, CEO of Steakholder Foods, the Israeli company that sent me the 3D-printed meat. “You need to eat a product that is amazing,” he says. Stakeholder sent me a few different plant-based meats. There were 3D-printed whitefish filets, 3D-printed filet steak, and 3D-printed marbled steak. There were also burgers and fish kebabs, neither of which were 3D printed. In a clear sign that the future of food had arrived, the cuts were packaged in a medical freight box stuffed with dry ice that quickly filled my kitchen with fog.

    Floppy Fish

    The advantage of 3D-printing food is all about creating delicious structures, says Kaufman. His company has made two different printers: one that prints fish, and another that makes cuts of meat—both using a premixed blend of ingredients. The meat printer can produce around 500 kilos of plant-based meat an hour, with the fish printer coming in at 100 kilos an hour.

    I cooked the whitefish filet as directed by the pamphlet inside the box: brushed with oil, then roasted for 10 minutes at 180 degrees Celsius (360 degrees Fahrenheit). The filet still looked a little pallid after 10 minutes, so I gave it a little longer until it had some color on top. I suspected searing the filet in a pan would have added a nicer crust, but feared it would not have the structural integrity to put up with that flipping. Then, as my filet disintegrated on the journey between baking tray and plate, my suspicions were confirmed. To the floppy filet I added a (vegan) lemon butter and caper sauce, sprinkled on some parsley, and served it with couscous.

    Kaufman says that 3D printing the whitefish re-creates the flakey texture of a fish filet. That wasn’t my experience in eating it. When cooked, the fish had a thin outer layer that flaked away, but inside the filet had the texture of mousse, with just the slightest hint of fish flavor.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleICE Signs $2 Million Contract With Spyware Maker Paragon Solutions
    Next Article I Own a Chevy Bolt, and Superchargers Are a Total Game Changer

    Related Posts

    Efforts to Ground Physics in Math Are Opening the Secrets of Time

    August 12, 2025

    Trump Promised to ‘Drill, Baby, Drill.’ The New Rigs Are Nowhere to Be Found

    August 11, 2025

    The First Widespread Cure for HIV Could Be in Children

    August 10, 2025

    See 6 Planets Align in the Night Sky This August

    August 9, 2025

    A Secretive US Space Plane Will Soon Test Quantum Navigation Technology

    August 7, 2025

    The Very Real Case for Brain-Computer Implants

    August 5, 2025
    Our Picks

    GPT-5 Doesn’t Dislike You—It Might Just Need a Benchmark for Emotional Intelligence

    August 14, 2025

    I Replaced My Mac With an iPad for an Entire Week. It Went as Well as You’d Expect

    August 14, 2025

    I flew Insta360’s Antigravity — it could change how drones are made

    August 14, 2025

    HTC is getting in on AI glasses, too

    August 14, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Gear

    OpenAI Designed GPT-5 to Be Safer. It Still Outputs Gay Slurs

    By News RoomAugust 14, 2025

    OpenAI is trying to make its chatbot less annoying with the release of GPT-5. And…

    Character.AI Gave Up on AGI. Now It’s Selling Stories

    August 14, 2025

    $25 Off Exclusive Blue Apron Coupon for August 2025

    August 14, 2025

    The Xbox app for Windows on Arm will soon let you download games

    August 13, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.